Australia鈥檚 embrace of microcredentials has raised concerns about their viability for universities and their utility for individuals.
Andrew Parfitt, vice-chancellor of the University of Technology Sydney, said the bite-sized courses had value as 鈥減ackages of learning鈥 for businesses. But he was sceptical about universities delivering 鈥渦ltra-cheap鈥 qualifications 鈥渋n isolation鈥.
鈥淚t makes sense to package them up for a company or group of companies,鈥 Professor Parfitt said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 much harder to see a business model where you sell them direct to individuals. We鈥檙e not exactly low-cost organisations.鈥
He said cybersecurity exemplified the value of microcredentials. While people in charge of information security required the 鈥渄eep鈥 expertise furnished by degrees, short courses made sense for regular workers. 鈥淢ore and more, every staff member is taking responsibility for cybersecurity and needs to understand something about it.
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鈥淸Microcredentials] have to have value鈥or employing or developing staff. Done in isolation, I鈥檓 not sure that there鈥檚 a long-term benefit.鈥
Queensland鈥檚 state government appears to agree, having injected another A$5.9 million (拢3.1 million) into its聽聽in its June budget. The scheme, which began in 2020, bankrolls the development of short courses to help businesses adopt new practices and overcome skill gaps.听
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At the federal level, 18 universities are sharing A$2 million to fund the development of聽聽in areas ranging from phonics, middle school leadership and 鈥淓insteinian physics for school teachers鈥 to food fermentation, infonet security and 鈥渘et zero engineering fundamentals鈥.
The courses, produced under the聽 programme, will be co-designed with industry. Universities will be invited to tender for another A$16.5 million to fund the delivery of the new qualifications to 4,000 students.
Australian National University policy specialist Andrew Norton has聽聽government intervention in a sector that seemed to be thriving without it. He says short, uncredentialed courses have long been the most common form of tertiary education, bankrolled primarily by employers who saw no need for regulation, and only produce a tiny fraction of university revenue.听
Professor Norton was particularly critical of Canberra鈥檚聽聽to extend government-backed loans to students of the courses developed under its microcredentials pilot programme. He said the initiative risked distorting the short course market, and most students do not need help paying fees that are fairly insignificant and often covered by their bosses anyway.
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The government has been accused of generating a distorted view of short courses by funding an聽聽that only includes offerings from higher education providers, about half of which are universities.听
The Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (Iteca) says the new platform聽聽the 99 per cent of short courses offered by vocational training colleges, industry associations, professional bodies and businesses. 鈥淣ot only did this initiative fall short of its intended goals but it also squandered taxpayer funds,鈥 Iteca聽.听
A Senate estimates committee聽聽that the government had spent A$4.3 million in developing the platform, which was only scheduled to operate for a year, and conducting related research. 鈥淭hat is an extraordinary amount of money,鈥 said shadow education minister Sarah Henderson.
Extra funding has since been injected to keep the platform running until the Universities Accord has reported its recommendations. 鈥淢icrocredentials are being discussed in great detail in the accord process,鈥 the committee heard.
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